Consider how the striking of clocks at midnight, Dec. 31, 1999, rendered the name New Millennium Writings obsolete.

At least certain critics and even some friends of my literary journal said so ten years ago. I never saw it that way. For the rest of our lives we'll live in the new millennium unless the world's intelligentsia, aided by endlessly flashing ones and zeroes, comes up with some Forever Formula to drastically extend our lives, surely a mixed blessing. Either way, this thousand-year cycle we entered a decade ago has barely begun.

True, it hasn't felt much like a new millennium. Perhaps childishly, some of us looked to the new era as a time when humans would emerge from our planetary nursery and set aside childish things such as war, economic hooliganism and environmental abuse. Our species would graduate to embrace the shining chalice of our Whole Earth and drink deep her royal blue promise.

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For us, the Supreme Court majority's choice for the new millennium's first president, in 2000, was a buzz-kill followed by years of nightmare hangover. It was a crushing turn of calendars, compounded by a new and virulent brand of intolerance for better-world dreamers and other political dissenters.

I paid a price for pointing to chinks in the armor of our so-called leader and those who surrounded him. In 2007, I ended my popular, 20-year newspaper column at the Knoxville News-Sentinel rather than see my commentary cut back to every other week, a move designed to dampen my on-going criticism of Cheney-Bush, whom the paper twice endorsed. Others faced harsher consequences than I.

And so it was with great celebration that many of us embraced Barack Hussein Obama. If he could begin turning the tide on global warming, usher in sane healthcare reform, build down nukes, end mountaintop removal, America's wars,torture and shadowy government entities, he just might deliver us into a New Millennium worthy of the name.

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That's turning out to be a big if. As this is written, the jury's out, Obama's Peace Prize notwithstanding.

Still, I make no apologies for supporting our nearly-new president, not only in my commentary but also in the pages of New Millennium Writings. As prize-winning poet Naomi Lowinsky writes, "There is a place in poetry where the spiritual and the political meet" I feared a slide into fascism."

Most of the writing in our annual anthology is apolitical, andfew pieces of overtly political writing have ever won our awards, except in the case of our once-only Obama Millennial Awards. Still, some political writing pertains in our next issue, due out later this month, and I've been criticized for mixing the twain. After hearing of our Obama award, which we bestowed on Lowinsky in the spring, writer Peter Lopatin withdraw a poem we'd accepted for publication until I offered to run a note acknowledging his protest. It appears in the book.

I made the offer for two reasons: First, I know what it's like to take a stand, and I can appreciate Lopatin's grit even while disagreeing. Second, I wanted his fine work in our anthology. In an email to the poet, I defended our Obama awards so:

"Obama's a published poet, and quite a worthy one," I wrote. As evidence, check out Obama's poem, "Pop," widely available on the Net. And I continued, "Much as I despised Bush, I wrote a column praising him as a fellow distance-runner and a worthy one, so there is a certain consistency here.

"I have no pictures of Obama on my walls. Still, I thought his election was seminal, worth noting in the same way NMW recognized the dawning of a new millennium with a special Y2K Award in 2000. That's why we did it. For that I don't apologize."

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If NMW and I are around when humans return to the moon or when the first woman's elected president, you can bet we'll acknowledge such seminal events, politics be damned. Otherwise, we will have diminished our claim to the name, New Millennium Writings" at least as we see it.

Meanwhile, I'll continue my advocacy journalism.

Two issues much on my mind these days are the proposed renewal of nuclear weapons production in this country and the practice of mountaintop removal to get at the coal—two of the worst Bush legacies that Obama needs to stop. Here are links that call for citizen action:

Don Williams is a prize-winning columnist, short story writer, freelancer, and the founding editor and publisher of New Millennium Writings, an annual anthology of literary stories, essays and poems. His awards include a National Endowment for the (more...)

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